Santa Fe New Mexican

Black support for GOP ticked up in 2022

- By Ayanna Alexander and Gary Fields

WASHINGTON — Black voters have been a steady foundation for Democratic candidates for decades, but that support appeared to show a few cracks in this year’s elections.

Republican candidates were backed by 14% of Black voters, compared with 8% in the last midterm elections four years ago, according to AP VoteCast, an extensive national survey of the electorate.

In Georgia, Republican Gov. Brian Kemp more than doubled his support among Black voters to 12% in 2022 compared with 5% four years ago, according to VoteCast. He defeated Democrat Stacey Abrams both times.

If that boost can be sustained, Democrats could face headwinds in 2024 in Georgia, Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia, where races are typically decided by narrow margins, and turning out Black voters is a big part of Democrats’ political strategy.

It’s too early to tell whether the 2022 survey data reflects the beginnings of a longer-term drift of Black voters toward the GOP or whether the modest Republican gains from an overwhelmi­ngly Democratic group will hold during a presidenti­al year. Former President Donald Trump, who has announced his third run for the presidency, received support from just 8% of Black voters in 2020, according to VoteCast.

The survey from this year’s midterms also found that Republican candidates in some key states improved their share of Latino voters, so any sustained growth in the share of Black voters would be critical.

A variety of factors might play into the findings, including voter turnout and candidate outreach. Yet some Black voters suggest they will be sticking with Republican­s because they said the party’s priorities resonate with them more than those of Democrats.

Janet Piroleau, who lives in suburban Atlanta, left the Democratic Party in 2016, during Trump’s first run for office, and now votes Republican. That includes this year, when she voted for Kemp in his victory over Abrams.

Piroleau said she felt Democrats were pushing for reliance on government programs. “That bothered me,” she said.

“For me, it was about being accountabl­e and responsibl­e and making your own decisions, and not depending on the government to bail you out,” Piroleau said.

April Chapman, who lives in metro Atlanta, is among the Black voters who favored Kemp and other Republican candidates.

Like Piroleau, Chapman cited issues such as immigratio­n, border security and the economy as important in deciding to become a Republican a decade ago. But the 43-year-old mother said her main break was over education.

She said she felt Democrats were trying to control what her children should be exposed to and how they should be educated.

“For our family, the government educationa­l system was not the best option,” Chapman said.

Camilla Moore, chairwoman of the Georgia Black Republican Council, said a large percentage of the voters Kemp won in the Black community “were actually Black Democrats.” Those voters made decisions based on Kemp’s performanc­e in addressing issues they care about, Moore said.

Her group also suggested that the Kemp campaign advertise on Black radio and “expend a little more effort in some areas that were a little uncomforta­ble.”

The results in Georgia, she said, could be replicated elsewhere with the right candidates.

“It’s not going to work for everybody,” Moore said. “It does work for those Republican­s who have demonstrat­ed that they truly are a senator for all or a governor for all.”

The VoteCast findings underscore a dynamic that Black activists and community leaders have long sought to convey — that Black voters are not a monolith.

Gloria J. Browne-Marshall, a professor at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York and author of a book on the voting rights movement, said Black voters need to hear from Democrats about why their vote is important and how the party will help them.

She said the message is particular­ly important for younger voters, who “went out in the street and risked their lives for police reform” after the killing of George Floyd in 2020. They also want voting rights protected but got neither at the federal level during President Joe Biden’s first two years in office.

“Instead, we get Juneteenth, and I don’t remember who asked for Juneteenth,” Browne-Marshall said, referring to the new federal holiday that commemorat­es the end of slavery in America.

 ?? BEN GRAY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? April Chapman, a small business owner, is shown at her home in Conyers, Ga., last week. Chapman, who lives in metro Atlanta, switched from Democrat to Republican after the 2012 election.
BEN GRAY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS April Chapman, a small business owner, is shown at her home in Conyers, Ga., last week. Chapman, who lives in metro Atlanta, switched from Democrat to Republican after the 2012 election.
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